Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Is there ever going to be a cap to these gas prices?

Is there ever going to be a cap to these gas prices?  How long are we going to remain hostage to Arab oil – and Hugo Chavez?

     How about a cap at $10 a gallon?  Will we be happy if prices stop at $10?  But, why should Exxon and the other Robber Barons stop gouging us there when we’re more than willing to keep lashing out to keep our cars running?  As for Arab oil and Chavez setting us free, that will be the day the wells run dry.  But, why complain when we so love the status quo?
     Of course, we keep hearing various voices from the gallery about electric cars, corn, and other clever means of running our cars without need of fossil-burning fuel.  Good old American ingenuity at work, and all is well.  The world will be saved.  Will the great American invention save us before gas is over $10 a gallon?  Forgive me if I’m just a wee bit skeptical.  After all, it’s just a bit dubious that Exxon and co-conspirators will be deliriously happy losing out on the record billions in profits they keep churning out each year that we cheerfully help them squeeze out of us.
     May I dare suggest the most obvious, rational, indeed, only sane alternative?  How about public transportation?  Oh, yes, I was prepared for your objections.  The first objection is always: it won’t work; it never has.  Such objections invariably insist that it has been tested many times, and it just doesn’t work.  Well, let’s see if what I’m proposing they have tested to the letter of the plan.  You tell me if they have.
     Let’s begin by making some simple, logical, necessary observations.  Some of the objections are: you can never find a bus when you need one; it takes forever to get to where you want to get, principally because there aren’t enough of them, requiring long waits between them and in making connections; they don’t go everywhere one needs to go; for weekly/monthly grocery shopping, there is too much to carry onto a bus and between transfers; the same problems for traveling by air; etc.  These are certainly valid complains as things are today and have been.
     Let’s consider the remedy.  Some simple undeniable facts: the average purchase of a car is roughly every five years; the average new car costs about $20-25K; if we are optimistic and give you at least 35 more years of driving, that amounts to about $175,000 we have paid to have the “freedom” of our car.  How about insurance?  How much does that cost, depending on age, accidents, and coverage?  If it is high now, do we expect it to come down any time soon?  How about betting that it will continue to keep climbing?  There is, of course, maintenance, repairs [something that is likely to become more frequent with the millions of additional new cars on the road [what with the countless legal and illegal immigrants and their numerous children, who will soon also be needing a car, that keep streaming into this country until we are bound to outstrip India and China in population in a few years the way this land of opportunity is going, where they are all going “to find a better life], time lost from work for repairs, hospitalization, and even death [a thing we think can never happen to us in the freedom of our cars]; etc.  That’s a chunk of change we’re pouring out just for the “freedom” of our cars.
     Why haven’t these so-called tests been legitimate, and thoroughly misleading?  The honest answer is that public transportation can never work so long as we have our roads cluttered with the millions of cars we have running on them.  To make a true test for public transportation, we must take ALL private vehicles that burn fossil fuel OFF the roads!  Now, if we can picture NO PRIVATE VEHICLES on our roads and freeways, can we not also imagine how quickly buses and cabs would be able to zip across town as fast and faster than a private car today, especially during rush hours?  That would make a difference, wouldn’t it?  One we have never seen in those so-called tests.  (For fuller discussion see my Missing in America: Freedom, Justice, and Honor and Boy, What I Could Do With Gates’ Billions!)
     Obama has earmarked billions of dollars for the repair and building of new roads.  What if instead of pouring those billions down the drain [since we shall never catch up with ourselves with the booming growth of our population and the need for millions of more cars and trucks each year, especially now that Mexican President Felipe Calderon has won the agreement from Obama to allow Mexican trucks onto our roads] we invested in a first-class public transportation system?  We would not have to keep building and repairing endless roads, and we wouldn’t be slaughtering the millions of people on our roads that we have since the first cars became lethal weapons.  [Food for thought for those people so concerned about the number of fetuses we “murder” in abortions.]  We get a lot of lip service about our concern for our environment, including its warming effects on our icebergs and rising seas, which are gobbling up our shorelines.  Could we make a difference by removing all fossil-burning private vehicles off our streets and expressways?  So, why aren’t we doing it, or do we really prefer just to listen to ourselves talk?
     We see in our major cities buses running virtually empty, and people complain because of high fares and poor service.  With everyone using the buses, the fares could be nominal and plenty of buses and cabs available at all hours and along all thoroughfares and most side streets.  Cabs, at nominal fares, would be the means of connecting buses and shuttle vehicles when necessary and convenient, especially to connect at airports.  Because the demand of oil would be reduced considerably the price of a barrel would plummet, and to run planes, buses, and cabs would also be reduced.  With the billions not wasted on new roads, they could be used to build “bullet” trains, so that not as many planes would be necessary.
     Obviously, if our proposal were taken seriously, we could expect the oil and car manufactures to wage implacable war against it.  Can we imagine seeing their top executives smiling and giggling while their billions of profits fly out the window?  We can also anticipate the loss of jobs, of course.  But did we mourn too much when the Pony Express was supplanted by the Stage Coach, the Stage Coach by the train, the train by the car and plane?  I dare say not very much or for very long.  We now have the Internet, practically making the Post Office and book publication obsolete.  It seems just about time for public transportation, if not to modernize, at least to save our necks – and spare us Hugo Chavez.

David Hernandez, Ph. D.


For More Information Check Out Boy, What I Could Do With Gates' Billions! and Missing In America: Freedom, Justice, and Honor.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Welcome to Dialectic Dialog

You are cordially invited to participate in a discussion on topics that are interesting to most people.  You may, of course, add your comments when you wish.  Thank you for your cooperation, and we hope you will find as much satisfaction in this kind of dialog, as you would like.  -- Dr. David Hernandez

Boy, What I Could Do With Gates’ Billions!


All manner of horrors bombard us every day from all quarters and their various facets, be it wars in the Middle East, fear of a nuclear holocaust, terrorism that may visit our shores or major cities [the next 9/11], violence in our homes and streets, saving ourselves from the current and next world financial crisis, sexual invasions by our clergy, pollution, discrimination, illegal immigration, etc.  Must we remain forever helpless against the inhumanity of man?  Can we do nothing to protect ourselves?

This book proposes not a correcting but a re-making of the world around us through an educational approach to civilize man not by trying to change him as he is but to re-make him as he should have been made in the first place.  What we have today is predicated on the selfishness and greed behind the actions that have brought us to this terrifying juncture in human history.  Selfishness and greed are not instinctual; proper child education can turn them into consideration, generosity, and respect.  Conduct based on such values can be the basis for an enlightened citizenry and a genuine humane society.

Such education is possible only if free of government (tax) control, hence “Gates’ billions.”  Neither would it be a dependency on Gates, but his charity efforts offer a comparative opportunity.  Bill Gates and Warren Buffett have united their billions in a charity designed to help the needy around the world buying technical equipment, health and educational programs, food, clothes, etc.  These are exemplary efforts to ease suffering and even save lives.  But, sadly, they achieve nothing in changing or preventing the man-made horrors above-mentioned.

Our proposed educational program will be designed with the independent voluntary billions that would compare favorably with the Gates/Buffet billions.  This program would be designed to teach values along with academic/technical/scientific topics: respect, ethics, kindness, generosity, and fair play [justice] through Talent Education [Suzuki Violin Method], the Golden Rule, and Patriotism, not as vaguely understood or scarcely practiced in general.  [Such values are taught in today’s schools, even by most parents.]  A strict parental requirement and commitment for entrance would be exacted, and only children under such oversight and guidance would be admitted into our unique educational system.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Missing in America: Freedom, Justice, and Honor


We as Americans go through our daily lives carrying with us the belief in such slogans that we live in a country of the free and the brave.  Yet practically every step we take in our daily routines belies what these mantras are supposed to mean.  Every day we Americans work diligently to rob ourselves of our freedoms.  We are supposed to be governed by our representatives.  Did our representatives vote for war in Iraq, or was it Bush and his coterie who took the vote away from us?  And who is paying for it, those who lied to America, or those who paid with their lives and the taxes for this mass suicide?  How were we free being dragged into such butchery?  Was it just?  Why do we keep voting for representatives who are in the hire of the very people who are bent upon controlling us?

When the rich control the oil and the public must be fettered to the relentless rise in prices at the pump, how free are we to choose otherwise?  When the stockbrokers and other white collar crooks scheme to create world economic crises in cycles, how free are we to defend ourselves from them?  Is it just?  Is it just that the gap between the rich and poor continues to grow relentlessly – to the poor? – to America?  How free are we to defend ourselves against the ravages of pollution caused by various big industries, whom our representatives [in their pay] defend at the expense of the public health?

These and many other subjects are discussed in an attempt to get at the causes, the disease, rather than their effects [or symptoms].  There is discrimination, illegal immigration, racism, the deadly effects of misunderstood patriotism, education or its lack thereof, the costly negative effects of the Civil Rights Movements, etc.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Ecstasy Celebrates Doomed Women in Ciudad Juarez - A Play By David Hernandez



For years now women have been murdered in Ciudad Juarez and vicinity, and its causes remain a mystery to the general public, most of it because the American public has not taken the trouble to learn about its southern neighbor, its culture and history, much less its very different values than American ones.  This play presents characters little familiar in American life, though the male and female protagonists are an American (Barry) and a beautiful Chicana (Soledad).

The term “ecstasy” takes on a double meaning in this play: it refers to ecstasy, the deadly drug and the pleasure the drug dealers take in torturing, raping, and killing their victims.  The American is a businessman taking advantage of the two cultures on either side of the border, but his Mexican competitors, who have been outwitted by the American, are constantly vigilant in searching for some way to compete with him, especially if they can find a way of running him out of town.

Opening the play is a scene where Barry and Soledad have just enjoyed a sexual interlude and are expecting some of his business competitors.  But along comes a corrupt Mexican highly ranked cop who accuses Barry of spying for the CIA, which could mean nuisance meddling in Mexican commercial and police affairs.  The plot revolves around these accusations and denials and the unexpected plea by some Mexican women, seeking asylum in Barry’s home, because they believe that Soledad, known to be Barry’s “woman,” could be sympathetic and aid them.

As the police investigations come close to proving that Barry is the CIA spy, he gets Soledad’s confession that she is the spy as they both discover that their “fling” has developed into a deep mutual love.  The collusion between the cops and dealers produces the information that reveals that the fugitive women have been staying in Barry’s home.  It is also discovered that Soledad is the CIA spy and is dragged out with the other women, all sure to meet with the same fate of the known murdered women in Ciudad Juarez.  Out of love, Barry takes gun in hand to go rescue his Soledad with little hope of reaching her before his body is riddled with holes.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

About the Author

Certain turns in his life took David Hernandez from a professional musician to an academic career that led to teaching English and Spanish at various universities and colleges around the country and publishing articles, poetry, and plays. Among his books are "Missing In America: Freedom, Justice, and Honor", "Boy, What I Could Do With Gates' Billions!", and "The Greatest Story Ever Forged (Curse of the Christ Myth)"  He has been active in music, theatre, sports, and social, educational, and political affairs.  Dr. Hernandez currently lives in Carrollton, Texas.